Newbs, you've come
this far. (Tweak smiles, holding two fingers about 1 inch apart.). Its finally time to
START making your music! If you master this page you will be
this far along (Tweak hold his fingers about 1 foot apart.) This page is important as we are going to write a song, step by step, and I am going to share with you some techniques and shortcuts I have learned through the years.

In fact, I am going to write a song using my own recipe, and will let you see and listen to it at various stages
of the project. Along the way I will insert tips and tricks
where you see "Time Out!". Some of these are hard earned composer's
secrets, so pay attention. I am also going to leave in all the
mistakes and problems at each stage so you hear what I heard. This is
not my best song. But it reveals the process. That is what this
article is about.

What you need

1. A good quality MIDI sequencer.

Are you serious? Then don't mess around with toys
and $50 buck midi programs! Sure they may have the same features as the big boys, but trust me, it just isn't the same. There is no substitute for the user friendliness of a top of the line (or near top of the line) sequencer used by the pros. While everyone needs to budget money for the studio, and
it is a very expensive enterprise, this is one area where a compromise may prevent you from reaching the heights. Music power is the ability to translate the music you feel into sequences
of data. If your sequencer makes it hard to do something, chances are great that you won't try in the heat of creation. The easier functions are, the more likely you are to use them. See
Comparing the top MIDI Sequencers for the PC for more.

2. Learn Your Sequencer's Basic Functions.

If you haven't done this you are wasting time. High
end sequencers do take time to master and have a steep learning curve. Think of
it as an investment. The joys of making your own music is the payoff, and it is worth every minute you spend figuring things out. All sequencers have their own internal logic
and organization. Its important to find out which sequencer has a way of working you can groove with. Here are the
absolute basics you must master.

Make sure you at least know the major key commands for REC. STOP. PAUSE. REWIND.
Don't use the mouse for these functions! It will slow you down and probably ruin a few ideas. I'm not kidding.
Nanoseconds count when you hit a live spark. If possible make it so your playing hand never leaves the keys. Use the other hand to trigger the record button. Know how to use a DRUM or PIANO ROLL
GRID. Figure out the fastest way to make a new track and
define an instrument.

Speed and intuitiveness is everything. You don't want to be mucking around with menus looking for functions as your live spark fades back in the void till its gone. Read up on what Quantizing does. So crack the manual. Chances are before you get too far you'll have a few ideas.

3. A desire for Quality.

The difference between a great sequence and a ho-hum one is quality.
You have to work towards this realm. Quality occurs when you work your sequences with mixers, controllers, effects, program changes and every element suddenly locks together to make a unified image and statement.
That's what all those tools are for. Once you are in the realm of quality you can't do wrong. Well things always can go wrong, but they are less likely when a vibe has caught you. Tweak that foundation till it moves your soul. Always ask: What can make this better?

4. Fun.

If its fun to record it might
actually be fun to listen to. This is the most important tip of them all! I don't care what they tell you in music school. Music is supposed to be fun! If it's not fun, it is not going to work. So make sure you "Play". A fun piece can break all the rules and go platinum. A "textbook perfect" piece might get you through a college recital, but that's all it will do.

Tweak's Recipe

Start with Drums

Start with one or two bars of Hi Hat, on a quantized grid, input notes with different velocities. (quarter
notes or eighth notes typically for rock, 16th notes for dance)

Lay down the same bars of bass drum. (Beats 1 and 3 for rock, ballads, etc., 1,2,3,4 for dance) (Go ahead, add leading notes, experiment--you are building a house, make the foundation strong and weather-worthy.)

Position and choose the snare. (Normally to beats 2 and 4) (Yes, add a frill, a flam, and flirt with this essential backbeat). Don't add the Toms yet, or anything else.

Copy this sequence to bars 1-8 (verse), then
copy it again to 9-17 (chorus)

Time Out!What's a Hook? A "hook" refers to the 1st opening bars of a song, sometimes to only the 1st few seconds. The hook must generate enough interest to keep the audience wanting to listen
.

Note, in Hip Hop Music, the Hook refers to the essence of
the Chorus (which is usually used to start the song.) Call it what
you want. But here, I mean the first few seconds of the song.

What's a Bar? A place where musician's hang out and get famous for their bad boy/girl behavior.. Yes..but in terms of music construction, a bar refers to a measure of music. In most pop music in the time signature of 4/4, that's 4 beats. "A One and a Two and Three and a Four" That's one bar or measure.

Using Audio Loops? No Prob. Just find the beat you like and lay it down. TIP: Even if you have the same loop repeating you should put it down a least every 5 bars. Even the best cut loops go out of sync if you try to run them 16 or more bars.

Doing Trance? Many pieces that have made a lot of money just start with a kick for 4 bars, and the hats the next few bars, then the snares all culminating in a snare roll. The rest of the rules below don't necessarily apply. Trance works by building up elements and dropping them out and adding new ones. Sort of like driving your car on the expressway with an every changing landscape, with the throbbing of the motor keeping it all unified.

Time Out! Do you know what the white and black notes are on your
keyboard? If you don't, take this quick lesson. It shows you what
you need to know in about 2 minutes, and how to use a marker and tape to mark
off the notes in the key you are in. Read
Tweak's Basic Keyboard theory Now!

Add Bass for Chorus

Back to a standard song. Do a baseline for the
chorus. Take your sweet time and experiment till you find something you really like--do not settle for "anything", and avoid tweaking reverbs, FX--just get the bass right. You do not have to sound like Jaco the Great here. The most powerful basslines in our music are very simple play-offs of octaves and fifths. Or its a simple walk up or down the scale. Or in some Trance music, just playing the same note in a straight run of 16th notes, deleting a couple at random and raising one note a half step. Make sure you LIKE what you have given birth to. Groove it, twist it, torture it. When your inner censor says "Wow, Cool!" move on to
the verse section. You might find, after coming up with the verse bassline
that you want to change the chorus bassline to make it fit better. Yes!
Do it!

Here you see the bassline for the chorus section.

Using Loops? Then find the bass loop you like. Note that it will probably take you longer to find one you like than making one from scratch.

Time Out: Song Building Secret: There are, some famous composers have argued, two general principles to follow when writing music. The First is
the rule of Similitude. The rule is the more you make things similar, the stronger they become. The second and opposing view is
the rule of Contrast. If you make things sound different, they are more interesting. Of course, both are correct. You can use these rules for
every aspect of the song. Yep! They are abstract. Use it to
build a melody and decide which note comes next; or use it to orchestrate instruments, or decide on the best
arrangement. If you ever get lost, ask yourself, "What would the rule of similitude say to do?" You Owe me, dude.

Add Melody for Chorus

Add a simplemelody line, same as above, to the
chorus. (Note we do the chorus before the verse). Play around a long time. What possibilities does the bass open up? Don't like it? Fire the Bass player and get a new one. Try different tempos. What's your mood? Try to match it with your inner rhythm of the moment. You are looking for a statement, so listen for it. its very common for sudden little sparks and flashes of meaning, but the hand might not know how to get there. Keep at it. When you are close, if you are not adept at keys, take a look in the grid editor and see what you have and move things around till they speak. In traditional rock, country, ballads, etc., the melody is the part sung. If you are doing something dancey, a one or two bar looped pattern of 8th or 16th notes go here.

Keep it simple, even if its stupid and sing-songy. Dude, think about jingle bells or yankee doodle. Or the Beatles "She Loves you Ya, Ya Ya." Stupid melodies WIN
HEARTS BIG TIME! If you have any doubt, just turn on the radio to ANY channel and listen to melodies. They are simple, catchy, easy. Even you jazz buffs, go watch a concert of avante gard players and watch the AUDIENCE. They only clap when someone does something simple (or finishes an overly long solo, thank
god)

Using loops? Here you have to do major digging to find something that is going to define and carry the piece. Keep you bassline running as you audition different arpeggios, (Arps). As above, be patient and try lots of things. you are looking for something to "lock". If you don't have to use loops, here is the place you want to try your hand at the keys and come up with something fresh.

Do the same as above for the Verse

Go to the verse and do the bassline and melody line. Same process as above. Lots of new composers have a little trouble here. The trouble begins usually when you start thinking of how these things must be different. Think of the melody as a friend you have that you want to introduce.

The verse is the part that gets everyone ready for the chorus. Now if
you were a chorus (stay with me now) what would you want the verse to do? Of course, you egotist, you would want it to build you up, roll out the red carpet, say all kinds of great things about you. That way, when you the chorus takes the stage you can fly.

Tension/Release. Question/Answer. These metaphors don't always hold. (Hey there's NO Rules), but they will get the new composer over the hump. Once you have a few successes with music, you will feel a freedom and all of this will become second nature.

Consider the basic form of the Arrangement

Now let me introduce the basic structure of the
Arrangement. The Verse is sometimes called the "A" Section. The Chorus is called the
"B" Section. There is usually a "C" Section too. We'll get into that in a bit. There is also an
Introduction and and Ending

IABABCACE

IABACBABE

IABCBCABE

Which one to use? Depends totally on the "feeling" you get when
arranging the song. These are NOT hard and fast rules. However, you need to keep the listener in mind. If they do not hear a repeating theme, they will get lost.

This is better than any book you can buy. Want to know what the
top arrangers are doing? Sheesh, the secrets are all out there
plain as day! All you have to do is count the piece out. Want to get your Tweak on fast? Go straight to
the mainstream Britney Spears, Madonna, Christina Aguilera. Don't
tell me "that music is crap..., sniff". Open your mind, just a
second, OK? Those arrangers are in the money big time cause they know how to hook
people. Don't fall into some stupid,
counter-productive "avante gard"
all-commercial-music-is-bad-cause-you-hate-all-celebrities. That's
just ego-driven drivel. Instead, count out their dirty little secret. You will have new respect for
the team behind these artists and how they play with the hidden rules in our minds of what contemporary music
must be.

Build the Song's Arrangement

Copy bars 1-8 to 17-24 (These are the
"A" Sections)

Copy bars 9-16 to 25-32 (These are the "B" Sections)

Listen to the
song at this point. I inserted a small break, a
"C" section at Bar 37, then copied it to the start and end of the song as a
"placeholder" for the intro and ending.

Your "core" of the arrangement is now complete. Evaluate. Do you like it? If so, Continue. If not, start over. Don't waste another second on something you don't like. A good song will "pull you in" at this point.
A great song will feel like time has stopped and you'll feel irresistible elation, a willingness to throw yourself on the alter of humanity, and a desire to stay up all night to cull this out. As funny as that sounds, experienced composers know its true. When you stumble upon a great song, you will
know it and you will be in total awe as its beauty reveals itself to you.

Go ahead and orchestrate (i.e., add different instruments that "go together") some instruments with the melody. Find the best patches, experiment with contrast, put a different sound in each frequency range. Avoid sounds that compete with each other. Imagine they are people actually playing the instruments. Make them earn their union wage, but don't piss them off with incredibly unrealistic passages, except when you have to. Remember, you are the boss, here.

Time Out: Orchestration and the Arrangement:

Do NOT let these terms freak you out! They are SIMPLE. These two
concepts help you THINK about how to build your song.
To Orchestrate is to find instruments that go together
for any given moment in time. The Arrangement is
the movement through the song's Intro, Verses, Choruses and Breaks in
Time, from start to end. For example, during the Chorus, the instruments may change.
You might switch from a clean to a distorted tone on Guitar, the vocal
might be double-tracked, you might add tambourine. Orchestration
changes as the Arrangement progresses. Remember, you are the boss
and can make any kind of orchestration you desire. If the standard
pop song arrangement does not work for you, try writing verses in 32
bars rather than 16 or 8. Your piece might become like an
orchestral work.

Develop a "break" (The "C" Section)

or counter melody or variation to fit into bars 32-48. It is OK to copy the drums from the verse section, just remember to change them a bit later on. Don't forget that drummers need a little break.

Orchestrate the break

Move the entire construction so it starts at bar
5

Develop an introduction.

Develop an ending. Congratulations!
Your song skeleton is complete.

Go back and listen to the whole thing a few times. What are you hearing? How can you make the piece unforgettable?

Adjust the tempo at this point if you need to,
before you start recording audio. Once you record audio, your freedom to
alter tempo is diminished.

Here you can see that I added 3 guitars
to the arrangement. At this stage experimentation rules. You can hear
the new tracks on page 2.